Let Him In (6)
Part One Part Two Part Three Part Four Part Five Part Six
Summary: A leaked photo. A brutal spotlight. A boy too afraid to stand still. She faces the storm of public scrutiny with a red dress, a camera smile, and a fractured heart. Jack says he loves her. But not where anyone can hear it. And love means nothing if you're too scared to say it out loud.
Warnings: Minors DNI. This one is a little heavier, babesâno smut in this chapter but definite emotional damage. Weâve got social media bullying, body shaming, a leaked photo, and our girl spiraling hard. Also includes crying, panic, jealousy, possessiveness, and a boy who says âyouâre mineâ in the middle of a fight (Iâm sorry. Heâs a lil insane.) If any of that might hit too close to home, please take care reading. That said, this chapter is also full of red dresses, glam, best friend moments, and our leading lady trying to hold her head up while the world falls apart. If you love angst, youâre about to feast. Iâll see you in the stairwell. xo
Red Means Go
The second Hailee shut the door behind her, it was like the world tilted. I stood there for a beat too long, frozen, the image from her phone still seared into the backs of my eyes. My limbs felt far away. Like Iâd been shoved underwater without warning, and everything above the surface was moving too fast to catch.
Sheâd tried to calm me down. Told me she didnât know where it had come fromâthat it wasnât being posted from one account, but passed around. Duplicated. Edited. Shared. She said she was working on it. That sheâd talk to her team, that sheâd come right back. I think I nodded. I think she squeezed my hand. But I couldnât hold onto her words long enough for them to mean anything. They fell right through me, like pebbles dropped into a well.
The moment she was gone, I sat down hard on the edge of the bed, phone gripped in one hand like it might anchor me. But it didnât.
It buzzed. Again. And again.
At first, I didnât look. I knew I shouldnât look. But I did.
My home screen lit up with notifications like warning signs. Texts from friends. My sister. My agent. Missed calls. A few voicemails I knew I wouldnât be able to listen to.
My socials were worse. Hundreds of new likes and follows. Comments stacking by the second. A tag I hadnât even seen before was trending.
His name. Then mine. Then both of usâcracked together in a single phrase, like weâd never existed apart. I clicked one post. Then another. The photo was everywhere. Slightly edited now. Cropped. Brightened. Frozen in time like a painting.
His mouth at my neck. My head thrown back. His hands where they shouldnât have beenâwhere theyâd always found their way. My shirt pushed up just enough to tell the truth. The shadows of trees and water in the background, blurred but too specific. The worst part wasnât that weâd been caught. It was that someone had waited. Saved it. Held onto it for months like a secret weaponâand decided today was the day to strike.
My fingers scrolled on their own. Comments blinked in and out.
âIs this her??â âSheâs not even famous. Who the hell is she?â âWhy her?â âGod, sheâs plain. He could do so much better.â âThey look hot together tho.â âImagine being her. Iâd cry too.â
I was crying.
Notifications started popping up on my own posts at rapid speeds. One of my recent selfies had a hundred new comments.
âHeâs been hiding this?â âShe looks different here?â âShe thinks sheâs famous now lmao.â
Another postâme on set, smiling, innocent in a way that made my stomach hurt nowâwas flooded too.
âHer teeth arenât even straight.â âPlain. Boring. Forgettable.â âNo wonder they were hiding it.â
They werenât just reacting to the photo anymore. They were dissecting me. Iâd always known the internet could be cruel. But I didnât think it would be this sharp. This specific. They werenât just attacking what we had. They were attacking me.
They dug through everything. Pulled old pictures, screen-capped videos from set, blew up stills where I wasnât even looking at the camera. Compared me to actresses heâd worked with. Models heâd never dated. One post had side-by-sides with some influencer in a bikini, captioned âJack fumbled.â Another quoted something I'd said in an interview months agoâout of context, reworked into something pathetic. Someone edited one of my vacation photos, added fake text like a meme. Another circled my smile, pointing out a crooked tooth like it was a crime.
My face became content. My name, a joke.
I hadnât known it was possible to feel so visible and so invisible at the same time.
Like I was being erased and scrutinized all at once.
I tasted salt in my mouth. My cheeks were wet, chest hitching. But I couldnât stop. Couldnât put the phone down.
Every post felt like a stone dropped in my stomach. My hands were shaking. A part of me kept looking for something kindâsome stranger in the comments to say she looks happy or leave her alone. Something to hold onto.
But the deeper I scrolled, the more it slipped away.
I was unraveling. In real time.
My phone buzzed again.
For a second I thought it might be him. But it wasnât.
I wanted to throw the phone across the room. Wanted to disappear. Instead I just curled tighter over the blankets, fists clenched in the sheets, breath coming faster. The walls were closing in, and I didnât even notice the knock at first.
Not until it came again. Louder. Closer.
And thenâhis voice, muffled but unmistakable. âHey. Itâs me.â
I didnât move. Didnât breathe.
The knock again. âCan you open the door?â
I stood slowly. My legs felt hollow. The phone was still in my hand when I opened it.
Jack froze in the doorway.
And I was still crying.
His brow furrowed the second he saw meâso fast it was like his face hadnât caught up with the rest of him yet. He stepped inside slowly, like he was worried heâd break something just by coming into the room. Not a trace of his usual charm. Just tension and concern and the kind of panic that only ever came when it was me.
âIâm sorry,â he said immediately, voice rough. âI shouldâve come sooner. IâI was getting calls. Too many. I didnât thinkââ He stopped, swore under his breath. âI shouldnât have left you alone.âÂ
His eyes darted down to my hand, still clenched around my phone like a lifeline. I knew what was on the screen. I saw it hit him before he even asked.
âOh, baby.â His voice was too soft. Like it hurt to say. He reached out gently, not even touching me at firstâjust brushing his fingers over the edge of the phone until I let it go. Then his arms were around me. And I collapsed.
I buried my face in his chest as the sob tore out of meâhot, loud, and ugly. The kind of cry that came from deep in the gut, from places that had been hurting too long. Jack held me tight, both hands pressing into my back like he could fuse us together, like he could squeeze the pain out of me just by being close enough.
His breath was shallow. I could feel it stuttering against the crown of my head. He was trying to hold it together. For me. But I could feel the fury under his skin. The tension in his arms. The way one hand moved up to cradle the back of my neck like he didnât know whether to comfort me or go find someone to blame.
âIâm so sorry,â he whispered into my hair. âThis wasnât supposed to happen. Not like this.â
One particular sob made my knees buckle, but he caught me without flinching. Lowered us both onto the edge of the bed in one slow, careful motion like he was handling glass.
âI shouldâve been here,â he said again, more to himself now. âIâm so sorry.â He pulled back just enough to look at me, cupping my face in both hands. His thumbs brushed over my wet cheeks, and he exhaled like he was trying to breathe for the both of us. âThis is my fault,â he murmured. âTheyâre saying that stuff because of me.â
His eyes were shining now too, jaw flexing like he was holding something back. Something sharp and raw.
âIâll fix it,â he said. âI swear. I donât care what it takes.â
Jack held me for a long time. Long enough for my sobs to lose their sharpest edge. Long enough for the shaking to start fading from my limbs, replaced by a dull, aching exhaustion that made it hard to lift my head. His hand never left the back of my neck, his thumb tracing mindless shapes into my skin like he couldnât stop touching me even if he tried.
Eventually, I felt him shift slightly. I thought he was going to say something, but then his phone buzzed in his back pocket. Again. And again.
He exhaled tightly through his nose, jaw flexing. âI should turn that off.â
I pulled back slightly, blinking up at him. âIs it bad?â
He moved to grab his phone from his pocket. âTheyâve been texting and calling nonstop. My agent, manager, some PR people. Theyâre in damage control mode.â
His phone started ringing now, the sound making me jump. He sighed, reluctantly pulling back and looking down at the screen in his hand. âItâs my manager,â he muttered, jaw tightening.
I nodded, wiping at my face, but I didnât look up. I didnât want to see itâdidnât want to watch him disappear into the version the world knew. The version who weighed consequences instead of feelings. The one who had to weigh the cost of touching me.
He gently moved me before standing and crossing the room to the window, answering the call with a curt, âYeah?â His voice shifted just slightly. Not fake, just careful.
I sat on the edge of the bed, head bowed, looking at my phone screen light up every few seconds where it sat on the nightstand. The harsh words flashed through my head. I should feel sad. I just feel numb. I could hear fragments of the conversationâwords like contain, strategy, fans, narrative. He didnât argue. Not really. Just listened. Quiet, tense.
Eventually, he turned back to me, tossing his phone down on the bed with a sigh as he dragged his hand through his hair.Â
âThey want me to brush it off,â he said, slowly. âSay itâs just fans being fans. A rumor. Or a leak from set. Something vague. Laugh it off if anyone asks.â
He waited. Watching me. I stared at my hands, the floor, throat tight.Â
Finally he came to kneel in front of me, head tilting to try and see my face. âThey think itâs safer,â he added. âFor you.â
That part was harder to hear. Not because it wasnât trueâbut because part of me was now screaming that it wasnât the only reason. Apparently, there were a multitude of reasons I should be kept hidden.Â
He reached for my hands to gently still them. I hadnât even noticed I had been anxiously picking at my fingers, my manicure now chipped at the sides and skin red. âHey. What do you think?â he asked gently.Â
I didnât move my eyes from the floor. My voice came out thinner than I wanted. âIf thatâs what they think is best.â
He frowned. âThatâs not what I asked.â
And here it wasâthat terrible ache again. That deep, crawling sadness I couldnât seem to shake. I didnât want to beg him. I didnât want to be the one who said, Please, donât pretend Iâm nothing. I wanted him to want to say it himself. I wanted it to be easy. I wanted it to not have to hurt. But maybe that was too much to ask. Maybe Iâd already asked for too much.
âDo what you have to.â It came out less convincing than I wanted it to.Â
His posture shifted instantly, like heâd almost flinched. I didnât look up. I couldnât. Instead I curled inward, laying down slowly on my side, facing the wall, like retreating might soften the blow. His head tilted, like he was about to say somethingâeyes searching for whatever he thought he was missing. âHey, donâtââ
But his phone rang again, loud and cutting. He swore under his breath and looked at the screen like it had betrayed him. âShit,â he muttered, then rubbed a hand down his face. âI have to take this. Just for a second.â
I didnât answer. I just pulled the comforter around me and closed my eyes, already too tired to cry again. The AC clicked on with a low sigh, and only then did I realize how cold Iâd gotten. It crept in like the rest of itâquiet, unnoticed, all at once. I drew the blanket tighter around me, like it might stitch the pieces back together. I could hear him talking, pacing the room, voice low and serious as he tried to sound collected. But his words blurred. The darkness crept in, thick and heavy, and the last thing I heard was him saying my nameâsoft and careful, like it was the only thing holding him together.
â
I woke hours later to the quiet hum of the hotel room, shadows cast long across the ceiling. The lamp was off. The city noise filtered in through the window, faint and distant. Jack was behind me, one arm draped over my waist, his body curled protectively around mine. His breath was warm at the back of my neck. I could feel his gaze on me. The kind that lingered. The kind that made my skin prickle with the ghost of touch. I didnât move.
Then I heard him. Whispering.
âI shouldâve said something. I shouldâve done more.â
A pause. A breath. Then, softer, âSheâs everything. I donât know how to hold it without breaking it.âÂ
His fingers flexed lightly against my hip, and I felt his lips graze the back of my shoulder as he breathed the words like a confession.Â
âI love you.â
It wasnât loud. It wasnât dramatic. It was quiet. Almost afraid. The first time heâd said it not in a letter or over the phone. He thought I was asleep.
So I stayed still.
And I let myself keep it. Just for me.
Just this once.
A single tear slipped down my cheek and into the pillow, silent as the words I couldnât say.
â
The first thing I felt was warmth. Not sunlightâJack. Solid and steady behind me, like nothing had broken.
His chest pressed to my back, his breath slow and steady at the base of my neck. For a moment, I let myself stay there, floating in the false safety of it. Just this. Just him. The weight of his arm around my waist. His fingertips brushing absently against my ribs like he was still holding on even in sleep.
Then it all came back.
The picture. The comments. The way Iâd cried myself out. The way heâd held me like I was breaking and he didnât know how to stop it. My eyes opened, slow and sore, and I blinked against the late morning light coming in from the window.
âHey,â came his voice, quiet and low. âDidnât mean to wake you. I was gonna let you sleep a little longer.â
I turned slowly, rolling to face him. His hair was a mess, his eyes rimmed red like he hadnât slept at all. Still, he managed a faint smile, brushing a strand of hair away from my cheek.
âItâs almost time,â he said, thumb lingering at my jaw. âWeâve got a few hours, but you should probably shower before you go to get ready.â
I nodded, barely trusting my voice. He didnât press. Didnât mention the photo or the press or what he wouldâor wouldnâtâsay. It hung there between us like a ghost. Something unfinished. But neither of us reached for it.
Not yet.
Instead, he leaned in and kissed my forehead. âGo on,â he murmured. âIâll see you soon.â
When he left, I stood under the water for a long time. The water in the shower was too hot at first. I let it sting. Let it hit my back until the mirror fogged. Trying to imagine the day ahead without splintering again.
By the time I reached the suite where we were getting ready, Hailee was already there in a robe, her hair clipped up and half-curled. She turned the second I walked in, and I didnât even have to say anything.
âHey,â she said, arms already open. âCâmere.â
I went willingly.
She held me tight for a long moment. No questions, no pushing. Just the kind of hug that reminded me there were still people who didnât want anything from me except me.
âYou okay?â she asked softly.
I shrugged.
She pulled back, hands still on my arms. âI came back last night. To check on you. I heard Jack in your room and figured Iâd let you two have your moment.â
âThanks,â I whispered.
She gave me a small smile. âLook, I know it sucks. People are mean. But they donât know you. Not really. And today is still something you worked your ass off for. You have to enjoy it. Even just for a second.â
I stared at her. Tired. Frayed. âYou think I can?â
âI think if anyone can pull off a red carpet moment after a personal apocalypse, itâs you,â she said, grinning.
I laughed. Actually laughed. She beamed.
That was when the team started filtering inâstylists, makeup artists, assistants with garment bags. The room filled with energy and noise, and for the first time in hours, I let myself get pulled into it.
Someone curled my hair while another lined my lips in a deep berry-red. I held Haileeâs hand while we had our lashes done, both of us blinking against the tickle of it. Our stylist unzipped our gownsâboth redâand we squealed.
âWeâre gonna look like the best kind of trouble,â Hailee said, spinning in her dress.
We took silly mirror selfies. Laughed too loud. Someone snapped a photo of us mid-laugh and I didnât flinch. For a moment, I wasnât the girl from the photo. I was just me. Actress. Friend. Human being.
After Hailee was called to get her shoes on, I paused in front of the full-length mirror. Really looked.
The dress hugged me like it had been made for this momentâlike it remembered the girl who used to dream about premieres from her bedroom floor. My hair was swept off my face, soft curls pinned just right. The makeup was sharp without being heavy. I lookedâŠhot. Glamorous, even. Like someone who belonged on the other side of the camera flashes. For the first time since the photo leaked, I didnât feel small. I didnât feel erased. I looked like a fucking movie star. Jack told me once that I looked dangerous in red. I didnât believe him then. I almost did now.
I squared my shoulders a little, lifted my chin, and smiled, crooked tooth and all.Â
We stepped into the hallway headed down to the lobby, and the cold air of the hotel AC kissed the heat off my skin. My heels clicked with every step, each one louder than the last. The whole cast was gathering now, publicists fluttering around like bees. Cameras already flashing in corners. I looked for him like I always had.
Jack stood near the entrance, dressed in a black suit cut like it was made for sin. He hadnât shaved. His hair was still slightly messy. He looked unfair. And he was already looking at me, eyes full of admiration. He looked at me like I was the only thing he could see. Like it hurt not to touch me. Like he hadnât stopped thinking about me since the second weâd left that bed. A blush creeped into my cheeks and I smiled shyly, looking down at the marble floor as I did so.Â
And still, that voice in my head whispered: not enough.
Because no matter how much he looked at me like I was everything, I still didnât know if he was willing to say it out loud.
The cast began to file outside, ushered into their respective cars. Mine was toward the back, grouped with the other girls. I glanced at Jack one last time as he stepped into his own.
He didnât look away. Neither did I. Not until the doors closed between us.
The car rolled to a stop at the edge of the carpet, and everything went quiet. Not silentâjust quiet, in the way a bomb feels right before it goes off. Like the air itself was holding its breath. I could hear muffled crowd noise outside the glass, flashes already starting, the pulse of bass from the speakers thudding like a second heartbeat. Haileeâs hand found mine in the dark.
âYou ready?â she asked.
No. But I nodded anyway.
A publicist opened the door, and the lights hit me like heat. It was like stepping into the sun. Voices. Shouts. My name. His name. A thousand overlapping questions. We stepped out together, red gowns catching the light like fire. I straightened my spine and smiled.
Youâre an actress. You can handle this.
Iâd told myself that a hundred times over the past year. Before auditions. Before crying scenes. Before our first scene, when my hands were shaking and he looked at me like I was already his.
I could handle this. I had to.
The carpet stretched ahead like a gauntlet. Hailee and I posed together, then were separated by publicists pulling us toward interview stations, camera crews, press lines. I answered questions the best I could but mainly I was on autopilotâabout the film, the shoot, my character. Most of the questions werenât about Jack or the photo. Not really. The movie was the headline. My first big role. People smiled at me like they were seeing me for the first time.
But I still felt like a ghost of myself.
A new interviewer stepped in, asking about what it was like to step into such an emotionally layered role. I nodded, smiled, said all the things Iâd practiced. But my eyes kept drifting just past her shoulder.
Jack was maybe fifteen feet away, mid-interview of his own, hands in his pockets, brow slightly furrowed in that familiar way. I watched the reporter lean in toward him, microphone tilted. My heart kicked. I tried to keep smiling, answering a question about what it had been like to film on location, but my ears strained.
ââŠleaked photoâany comment?â
My stomach went cold. The interviewer in front of me didnât seem to notice. She was still smiling. Still nodding. But my pulse was loud in my ears.
Jack paused. Just a beat too long. Then I saw his mouth move.
âItâs just fans having fun,â he said. âSpeculation. Happens all the time.â
It landed like a slap.
Not a lie. Not quite the truth. Just a soft dismissal. Polished and impersonal. My smile stayed on, but my chest went tight. He hadnât looked for me before he said it. Hadnât checked to see if I was close enough to hear. I was.
And for a secondâjust a secondâI hated that I had been.
The reporter in front of me was still talking. I nodded, murmured something about learning a lot on set. I kept the mask on. My body did what it was trained to do. But the ache behind my ribs was something new. Sharp and specific in a way I hadnât known I could feel. Because people werenât asking me about us. Only him. And he got to decide what story they heard.
âCan I ask one more?â the reporter said, and I nodded. âThereâs a lot of love for your friendship with Hailee online. How would you describe that relationship?â
That brought me back, a little. I smiled, softer this time. âSheâs become my best friend. SheâsâŠgotten me through more than she probably realizes.â
I hoped Jack heard that. I hoped he understood that not everyone had failed me.
Hailee was suddenly beside me again, looping her arm through mine like she felt the shift. Like she knew. Her hand squeezed mine gently. I didnât look at her. I couldnât. Not yet.
Youâre an actress. You can handle this.
Hailee steered me across the carpet toward the staging area for press photos. âAlmost done,â she whispered. âJust a few more shots, then champagne and oxygen.â
I let her pull me forward. The cameras were still clicking, flashes still popping. Someone behind us called for the cast to gather near the backdropâa massive, screen-printed version of our movie poster. The PR team was herding people like sheep, trying to assemble some organized chaos before we lost the light.
I was trying to stay upright. Trying to breathe past the burn in my chest.
Then I felt it.
Jackâs eyes on me.
I didnât look at first. I didnât want to give him the satisfaction. But something pulled meâgravity or masochism or maybe just the need to see if he meant it.
I turned my head.
He was already looking. Still in the black suit. Still jaw-droppingly beautiful in a way that made me want to scream. But his expression was unreadable. No smile. No softness. Just guarded. I hated that I couldnât read him. Hated that heâd whispered he loved me and still said what he said.
I looked away first.
The cast began filing into position for the group shot. Hailee and I ended up toward one side, her arm still looped through mine. She cracked a joke about our dresses clashing with the backdrop and I laughedâlouder than I meant to. Maybe because I needed to feel something that wasnât this gnawing ache in my chest.
Then Michael stepped up beside me.
âHere comes your favorite co-star,â he teased with a wink.
I arched a brow. âDebatable.â
âOh, come on. I made you laugh the most. I heard you tried to recast me with Jack once, but I forgive you.â His smile was sly and knowing.Â
Thenâhis arm slipped around my waist like it had every right to be there, fingers settling just above my hip. Then sliding a little lower. The grip was playful, almost flirtatious. Like we were in on a joke no one else knew.
He leaned closer as if he were whispering something sensual in my ear. âRelax. Just giving them something else to talk about.â
The cameras snapped.
But Jack saw.
I felt it instantlyâhis gaze like a lit match against skin. My stomach twisted, pulse spiking. I didnât need to look to know. I could feel him across the space like gravity.His head snapped toward us, shoulders squaring like a loaded spring. And when I finally glanced in his directionâ
His expression wasnât unreadable anymore.
It was furious.
Eyes dark. Jaw locked. Lips parted just slightly like he was halfway to saying something he shouldnât. One of the publicists beside him flinched, like theyâd picked up on it too. His whole body was coiledâone wrong move away from crossing the carpet. Away from wrecking the carefully staged image that surrounded him.
I stared at him, a challenge behind my smile now.
Because how dare he?
How dare he glare like that now, like I was the one stepping out of line? Like he hadnât left me bleeding in a hotel room with a whisper of love and nothing else? Michaelâs hand pressed a little lower, almost imperceptibly. And still, it jolted something loose in meâa memory, sharp and hot, of Jackâs hand there instead. The way he used to touch me when we were alone. The weight of his body. The sound of his voice when he said my name like it was a secret.
Six months of phone calls. Late night texts. Breathless voice notes. Whispered I miss youâs from across oceans. Him reading me poems. Us.
Not a fling. Not pretend.
And now I was just another rumor he had to laugh off.
I smiled at the camera.
Let him watch.
Let him think about what it would feel like if someone else really did touch me the way he had.
Let him stew in it.
The flashbulbs went off again.
And I didnât look back at him again.
But I felt him watching the whole time.
â
The lights dimmed, and the opening credits rolled to a burst of applause. I sat frozen in my seat, the hum of excitement around me muffled beneath the weight in my chest. My eyes flicked down the row. Jack sat at the end, posture stiff, jaw clenched tight. He hadnât looked at me since we came inside.
And then, halfway through the first scene, he stood.
He didnât make a soundâjust slipped out the end of the row, hands in his pockets, head down like he didnât want to be seen. But I saw him. I always did.
And I knew he wanted me to follow.
My heart slammed against my ribs as I stood and slipped after him, heels muffled on the carpet, eyes burning as I passed rows of glowing screens. The second the doors shut behind me, the air changed. Quieter. Colder. The hallway outside was heavy with silence, the muffled pulse of the film still beating like a distant threat. I turned the corner and saw him at the end, one hand braced against the wall, the other dragging through his hair. He didnât turn at first, even when he heard me. Just stood there with one hand in his hair, the other clenched at his side, shoulders drawn like a bowstring ready to snap.
âYou followed me,â he said flatly, voice low and hoarse.
I stopped a few feet away. âWhat are you doing out here?â
He let out a bitter laugh, finally turning. âCould ask you the same thing.â
âYou left the movie.â
âSo did you.â
The silence after that was thick and hot. My pulse was in my throat.
His jaw twitched. âYou didnât have to let him touch you.â
I blinked. âExcuse me?â
âMichael,â he snapped. âDonât play dumb.â
I scoffed. âAre you serious?â
He pushed off the wall, eyes flashing as he came closer. âHe had his hand all over you.â
âOh, my God,â I snapped. âAre you serious right now?â
He stepped closer. âIâm dead fucking serious. You think I didnât notice? You think the cameras didnât catch that too?â
âIt was a photo op.â
âDonât care.â
âMichael was trying to help.â
His laugh came sharp now. âBy touching you like that? By putting his hand on you like you belonged to him?â
âHe was trying to take the heat off me. Trying to give them something else to focus on,â I tried to explain, frustration seeping out with every word.
âI donât give a shit what his intentions were.â Jackâs voice rose.
âHeâs my friend.â
âHeâs not your anything.â
My laugh was bitter. âOh, but you are?â
His face darkened. âIf he touches you like that again,â he said, low and dangerous, âIâm going to break his hands.â
I sucked in a breath. âYou donât get to act like this. You donât get to be jealous.â
âThe fuck I donât,â he snarled, chest heaving. âYou think I didnât see him grab you like that? You think I donât know exactly what he was doing? Youâre mine.â
âAre you sure?â I snapped, voice rising. âBecause you said I wasnât.â
His mouth openedâbut nothing came out.
âI heard you, Jack,â I continued, voice shaking. âI watched you say it. Like none of it mattered. Like I was nothing but another rumor you could laugh off.â
He stepped forward again, hand twitching like he wanted to reach for me but didnât. âI thoughtâI thought thatâs what you wanted.â
My stomach dropped. âYou thought I wanted you to pretend I donât exist?â
âNo,â he said quickly. Too quickly. âNot like that. I justâI didnât know what the right thing was. I didnât want to make it worse. You said do what I had toââ
âI shouldnât have to tell you,â I said, barely above a whisper. âI shouldnât have to beg you to pick me.â
He flinched.
âI wanted you to want to,â I said, louder now. âI wanted you to want to say it. To be proud. I shouldnât have to beg you to pick me. Not after everything. Not after the nights on the phone. The nights in my trailer. The woods. The way you would look at me like I was already yours. Tonight you didnât even look to see if I was there before you sold me out with a smile.â
He took a step closer. His eyes were glassy now. Pained. He looked like he wanted to tear his own skin off. âI didnât know,â he said, broken. âI didnât realize. I thought I was protecting youââ
âBy hiding me?â
His throat bobbed as he swallowed. âBy not ruining it.â
And suddenly, I saw itâall of it. The guilt. The fear. The grief. It was all there, barely restrained, crouching behind his eyes like it had nowhere to go. He looked at me like I was the only real thing heâd ever touched and he was terrified heâd break it. His hands were clenched at his sides like it physically hurt not to touch me. He didnât know how to fix it. He hadnât even realized it was broken.
He lookedâŠstupid with love. And full of regret.
But it didnât matter.
Not now.
âWeâre not in the Mill anymore,â I said quietly. âWeâre not Maggie and Remmick. Iâm done pretending.â
I turned.
And this time, I didnât stop.
Behind me, I heard nothing. No apology. No protest. Just breathâ
Held. Shaking. Gone.















